Publication | Open Access
Intercellular trafficking of the nuclear oncoprotein DEK
51
Citations
38
References
2013
Year
Molecular BiologyCell CycleDek InternalizationGlobal Heterochromatin IntegrityCellular PhysiologyIntercellular TraffickingCell SignalingCell TraffickingChromatin BiologyProtein TransportCell BiologyChromatin FunctionChromatinSignal TransductionChromatin RemodelingNatural SciencesIntracellular TraffickingCellular BiochemistrySystems BiologyMedicine
DEK is a biochemically distinct, conserved nonhistone protein that is vital to global heterochromatin integrity. In addition, DEK can be secreted and function as a chemotactic, proinflammatory factor. Here we show that exogenous DEK can penetrate cells, translocate to the nucleus, and there carry out its endogenous nuclear functions. Strikingly, adjacent cells can take up DEK secreted from synovial macrophages. DEK internalization is a heparan sulfate-dependent process, and cellular uptake of DEK into DEK knockdown cells corrects global heterochromatin depletion and DNA repair deficits, the phenotypic aberrations characteristic of these cells. These findings thus unify the extracellular and intracellular activities of DEK, and suggest that this paracrine loop involving DEK plays a role in chromatin biology.
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